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7 November 2013

Jon Cruddas’s George Lansbury memorial lecture: full text

"Labour has too often renounced the transformative in favour of the transactional."

By Jon Cruddas

The Choice before One Nation Labour  – to Transact or Transform.

Queen Mary University of London

Good evening.

George Lansbury is one of the great figures in the history of the Labour Party. Adored and dismissed in equal measure.

‘No brain to speak of’ according to Beatrice Webb; ‘the most lovable figure in British politics’ suggested AJP Taylor.  

Just this week on Radio 4, Shirley Williams was recounting a childhood where family friends like Herbert Morrison treated Lansbury with disdain. Yet here in the East End ‘good old george’ was greeted with popular acclaim- his name literally chanted by children when he appeared in school or playground.

Lansbury is being rediscovered. Although rehabilitation is far from complete.

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However, when we talk about the rediscovery of Lansbury we are really talking about something bigger.  Orthodox social democratic politics has crashed across Europe. Millions of voters have been lost. We have to find a new politics to reconnect with people and the way we do that is to reclaim the parts of our history that will help.

Through Lansbury we can rediscover exiled traditions within Labour; by returning to questions of ethics and virtue; of lost utopias.Rebuilding hope, energy and vitality through returning to issues of principle and character.

It is about re-imagining what a Labour Partycould be. This re-imagined socialism isromantic, not scientific; humane and warm;passionate yet humble; it is about rediscovering a political sentiment. It pushes back against party orthodoxy, careerism and transactional politics.

That is why I applaud the work of the Lansbury Memorial Committee. Your effortsto promote his life and work help us re-imagine what  Labour could be today.

Brief History

George Lansbury was an East London  MP for Bow and Bromley from 1910 to 1912 and from 1922 to 1940.

He was leader of the Labour Party from 1932 to 1935.

He lived at 39 Bow Road. The site is now occupied by a block of flats that bears Lansbury’s name and carries a memorial plaque. At the corner of Bow Road and Harley Grove, there is a stone memorial that describes “A great servant of the people”.

He was honoured by the people. The Lansbury Estate, Lansbury Gardens, many street names both in London- including in my Dagenham constituency- and  his Suffolk birthplace as well as Lansbury’s Lido on the Serpentine are all named after him.

He was born 21 February 1859. His father was  a migrant worker. His mother, Anne Lansbury, was of Welsh heritage. His parents drinking defined George’s lifelong abstinence from alcohol.

His family were nonconformist and radical. In 1868 they moved to Bethnal Green.

His initial political involvement was with the Liberal Party.

In 1892 he helped form the Bow and Bromley branch of the SDF. He later joined the ILP. On its formation in 1906 Lansbury joined the Church Socialist League and became its Vice-president.

In 1912 two years after becoming an MP he clashed with Asquith over the issue ofwomen’s suffrage and resigned his seat. ‘It was not a wise political decision’ he later said. He lost by 751 votes.

Campaigning for women’s suffrage, Lansbury was charged with sedition in 1913 and jailed in Pentonville.

In 1912 he helps found  the Daily Herald. In 1922 desperately short of funds Lansbury reluctantly handed over the paper to the TUC and the Labour Party. Between 1925 and 1927 he edited Lansbury’s Labour Weekly.

He established the first pioneering training school for destitute Poplar children in 1905, called Hutton Poplars in the Essex countryside, the model for many subsequent children’s homes.

As Labour Mayor of Poplar, Lansbury led thePoplar Rates Rebellion in 1921, opposing not only the Government and the London County Council, but also leaders of his own party; it was not the only time he and Morrison were on opposite sides.

The rebels refused to hand the tax precept to the LCC instead they gave it to the poor. Thirty councillors, including six women, were jailed by the High Court for six weeks. Council meetings were held in Brixton Prison.

A rates revision was won and Lansbury returned to Parliament in 1922.

In 1927 he was elected Chairman of the Parliamentary Labour Party. In the Second Labour Government of 1929 he was First Commissioner of Works.

51 Labour and ILP MPs survived the 1931 election including Lansbury. He became Chairman of the PLP. In 1932 Henderson stood down from the leadership of the party in the country and Lansbury was elected Leader.

Through the early 1930s his absolute pacifism brought him into conflict with the Party leading to his resignation in 1935 after a brutal collision with Ernest Bevin at the Brighton Conference literally as giant hailstones smashed into the roof of the Conference Centre and the delegates sang in praise of him.

He was subsequently chair of the No More War Movement  and the War Resisters’ International and President of the Peace Pledge Union.

He died of cancer on 7 May 1940, aged 81, in Manor House Hospital in North London.

He married Bessie in 1880. They had twelve children; he was the father-in-law ofsuffragette Minnie Lansbury, Belfast-born actress Moyna MacGill, and historian and novelist Raymond Postgate.

George Lansbury was grandfather of actressAngela Lansbury, producers Bruce and Edgar Lansbury, and animator and puppeteer OliverPostgate.

Interpretation

This potted history suggests Lansbury is not easy to categorise.

In the 1880s and early 1890s he was involved in all four of the forces critical in thedevelopment of a distinct labour tradition. Industrially,  in the New Unionism of the period. Organisationally, in the SDF, in the ILP and with the Fabian Society.  

He stood with Ben Tillett at the 1889 dock strike, at times was active with the Fabians. In 1892 he joined the SDF becoming its national organiser in 1895 and subsequently  runningfor parliament 3 times under its banner. In 1903 he joined the ILP and emerged as one of its sponsored stars within the PLP. How do we make sense of it?

These East London Streets

The East End of London is fundamental to the history of Labour. Two key figures though not from here, had their characters forged in these streets and the local ILP of the first decade of the last century.

Most prominent is the Clement Attlee ofHaileybury House, Toynbee Hall, the youngest ever Mayor of Stepney; local MP, Leader of the Party and then the Country. Arguably the greatest Prime Minister this country has ever had.

Then there is the greatest Labour Leader of the Opposition. George Lansbury.

To have had a third Labour Government in 1945, or Wilsons and Callaghans governments of the 60s and 70s – or Blair and Browns of more recent years – you had to have a party forthem  to inherit and subsequently lead. This is what Lansbury delivered through his personal character.

The PLP according to Raymond Postgate ‘was reeling from the double shock of treachery and defeat. It wanted someone who could restore its confidence in human decency’. Desertionhad destroyed the PLP. In Lansbury they ‘found someone whom they loved and who loved them  with no touch of patronage’.

This is part of his legacy- to quote George Thomas- ‘He not only saved the soul of the party, he saved the party. We could have sunk into oblivion and the Liberals could have been reborn’.

Attlee, Lansbury and the ILP

It is the ILP association with Attlee and Lansbury that is vital. This year marks the 120 anniversary of the ILP. His  biographer JohnShepherd described the ILP as Lansbury’s‘natural home’. Attlee described the critical importance of his own journey to the ILP.  It  anchors them both within a distinctive English socialist tradition and bridges their political lives.

In 1919  Major Attlee becomes the youngestever Mayor of Stepney. He supported Lansbury and the Poplar Rates Rebellion in 1921.  He was elected MP for Limehouse in 1922 at the same election that saw Lansbury get back into parliament a decade afterresignation.

In 1934 Attlee becomes acting leader for 9 months when Lansbury falls and nearly dies. Later Attlee defeats Greenwood and Morrisonwhen taking over from Lansbury.

The young Clement Attlee joined with 15 others to form the Stepney branch of the ILP in January 1908; 5 years earlier a few streetsaway Lansbury had taken a similar journey.

Founded in Bradford in 1893 the ILP grew from the bottom up- ‘from those shadowy parts known as the provinces’ to quote EP Thompson. Its image one of bohemianism: ‘braving apathy and hostility, buoyed up by optimism, concerned not with the minutiae of political dealings but the broad uncomplicated advocacy of ethical principles’.

Under Hardie in 1895 the ILP turned away from the doctrinaire economism of the SDF.

Instead it created a unique blend of domestic socialism. In the notion of a ‘Labour Church’ and the ‘Socialist Sunday School’ movements with their alternative commandments which sort ‘the realisation of Heaven in this life by the establishment of a society founded on justice and love to thy neighbour’ and to ‘honour the good, be courteous to all, bow down to none’.

Its politics ethical, not materialistic. Romantic and utopian built around the dignity of the human being and our fundamental equality.For Attlee it was a secularised ethic; for Lansbury a Christian one. Both refracted into a story of patriotic renewal and English virtuealthough divided around military intervention. One the second to last off the beach at Gallipoli the other resigning from the party leadership through a pacifist absolutism.  

The ILP radicalism forged in these streets defined the political certainties and leadership qualities of Lansbury and Attlee. It held the party together after 1932 yet propelled Lansbury into resignation. It defined the texture of the 1945 government. It enthused Attlee’s political passions although locked down within a English middle class ‘rib cage of tradition’ and disguised by what Frank Field has called the self creation of a personalpolitical ‘death mask’.  

It is part of a now exiled English socialism, let’s give it a name. Lets call it a One Nation politics.

The Arc of a distinct English Socialism

The final political speech made by William Morris was in Holborn Town Hall in 1896 seconding a George Lansbury motion. Much later on the 25th anniversary of Morris’s death  Lansbury sat in a prison cell reflecting that ‘fellowship is life’ and ’his conception of what life would be when men and women are free’.The key to George Lansbury is that he offers us the link between the Labour Party andMorris.

After the second world war, parts of the so called ‘New Left’ in the UK sought to focus on William Morris and his work as part of a general rehabilitation of a perceived Englishhistorical socialist arc. This owed a profound debt to English romanticism: anti scientific and artistic in orientation.

EP Thompson’s work is part of a distinct political project within the Communist Party to identify a specific English radicalism – a politics of virtue – in the character of Morris himself, but also of the emerging working class. The sub-title of Thompson’s biography of Morris is Romantic to Revolutionary.

Raymond Williams, in his classic text Culture and Society, defines a political, artistic and cultural tradition from John Ruskin, through Morris, to the modern New Left.

Starting with John Ruskin, he focuses on his resistance to laissez faire society through artistic criticism where ‘the art of any country is the exponent of its social and political virtues… the exponent of its ethical life’.

What we value in life is taken out of the realm of political economy – of supply and demand, and calculus – and instead relates to the virtue of the labour itself – seen as the ‘joyful and right exertion of perfect life in man’.

Within Ruskin, the notion of wealth and value, and indeed labour, are used to attack 19th Century liberalism for its cold utilitarianism, and instead promote a society governed by ‘what is good for men, raising them and making them happy’. To live a virtuous life; to become wiser, compassionate, righteous, creative. What it is to become a ‘freeborn Englishman’.

What is of value is not the notion of ‘exchange value’. It amounts to a radical critique of political economy; of economic transactions.It is the source of a distinctly English, radical transformative politics. One that is sometimesidentifiable within the Labour Party.

Morris is the critical link, as this form of socialist thought is attached to the political formation of the emerging working class in the late 19th Century.

This turbulent period of class struggle occurs alongside a ‘neo-classical’ economic revolution; removing value away from labour itself into the scientific realm of individual rational preferences. It still dominates today. It is called neo-liberalism

The socialism of Morris is grounded in theemancipatory conception of human labour and creativity. Art constitutes a politics of resistance to life being commodified. This is what constitutes socialism.

This was not – as is often assumed – backward looking or anti-technology. This is a crass misreading of Morris: to pitch him as against civilisation. Rather it is built around the creativity of human labour. It is a continuous struggle, not just against capitalism – given its alienating effects on human creativity – but also left-wing utilitarianism and Fabianism.

Socialist change is not simply political and economic change – the ‘machinery’ of socialism – as he called it – but heightened consciousness that aims to realise a person’s true capacities. Self realisation.

In the cauldron of 1880s England it was a politics built around the search for an authentic human life and growth. The struggle for a society that releases other human virtues.

The period was one of profound change and economic rupture; of major political realignment and struggle. Socialist responses divided between rationalist and romantic.Morris as the key figure on one side.Fabianism, utilitarianism and various socialist scientific or economistic strands on the other.

Here stands  the classic fault line within the history of socialism as later defined byTawney- between its economic and its ethical traditions.

 
Lansbury and Morris

Morris is long dead yet arguably remains the most significant figure in English socialism.

The three great prophets of Labour and the ILP: Keir Hardie, Ramsey MacDonald and George Lansbury – the ‘apostles of the old faith’ to quote Ken Morgan- were all driven by a profound sense of human fellowship forged alongside Morris in the 1880s.

Keir Hardie, ‘ a latter-day Jesus’, formed as a rebel in the Ayrshire coalfields in the 1880s. A founder of the ILP in 1893. The illegitimateteenage miner reading Carlyle and Ruskin. Hecited William Morris as the ‘greatest man whom the socialist movement has yet claimed in this country’.

Ramsey MacDonald, who joined the ILP in 1894 when essentially a utopian pacifist. He maintained a unique popular appeal; acharisma that David Marquand explains‘partly because he spoke to and for this strand of British socialism, that produced the ILP Arts Guild of the middle twenties and which looked back to Walter Crane and William Morris’. Macdonald was able to ‘capture the imagination of the Labour movement in a way that a narrowly political leader would have found it hard to do’.

And Lansbury who wrote from his south London prison cell: ‘in the columns of commonweal, in pamphlets, lectures and speeches [he] made me realise that there was something more to be thought of than Acts of Parliament and State Bureaucracy…surely what we strive for is a society of free men and women bound together by ties of comradeship and communal wellbeing as pictured by Morris’.

Yet gradually through the 1930s the page turned- the planners, scientists, organisers and the economists – Dalton, Morrisson, Bevin,Jay, Gaitskill, Wilson, won out. The rationalists that won out, backed by the unions, who retreated into the party structures.Mechanistic, centralising remedies won out. 

Webb’s mistake, according to Morris, was to ‘overestimate the importance of the mechanism of a system of society apart from the end towards which it may be used’. The question of human virtue becomes at best residual.

The romantics lost. Sure, from time to time a few creep through. Bevan with his focus on the aesthetic of council house production. His ‘emotional concern for human life’. Deeply artistic, he held a libertarian belief in the capacity of all humans to flourish. He could make socialism sing. A ‘sensual puritan’ as described by Michael Foot.

Indeed Foot himself had elements of the tradition, alongside Kinnock and early Blair.Yet generally this tradition has crashed,burned or been exiled.

It is William Morris that lies behind the romance of socialism. Its possibilities. Its hopes. The sense of a creative life we could all live: that is our shared humanity. It also talks of what we have lost as we commodify our lives and our relationships; our children, our culture.

WB Yeats, wrote this of Morris: ‘No man I have ever known was so well loved… People loved him as children are loved. I soon discovered his spontaneity and joy and made him my chief of men’.

This devotion echoes the East End children’s devotion to Lansbury as they sang about him in the school yard.

Death and Socialism

Virtually 80 years ago, in early December 1933, in Gainsborough having opened a bazaar and before addressing a party meeting Labour Leader Lansbury falls and very badly fractures his thigh.

He felt close to death. He was to remain in the Manor House Hospital in Hampstead for over 6 months- he had his 75th birthday there.

He used the period to good effect. Publishing two books within a year. The first was a second volume of memoirs. The other avolume entitled ‘My England’. In effect a new Christian socialist manifesto built around a series of articles published in the Clarion.

It is here that George declares his essential creed- his ‘desire always is to chain down misery and set happiness free’. The task at hand literally ‘to reconstruct the whole life of the nation’.

The significance of Lansbury is best understood in these pages- especially chapter 17 entitled ‘The Joy of Living’. A unique blend of ILP radicalism, christian socialismand the possibilities of human creativity andadvancement inspired by Morris. More than any other Labour politician Lansbury had become anchored within, and spoke to, thisspecific romantic, English radical socialisttradition. With five essential elements.

First a ‘national popular’ patriotic socialism.

Second, a transformative agenda that rejects a shallow end transactional labour politics.

Third, a socialism hinged on gaining power to give it away- a trust in people and a radical democratic bent.

Four, a feminism driven by a specific understanding of human equality.

Fifth, an ethic anchored within a conception of the human condition and its creative possibilities, duties and obligations  and sense of fellowship.

………………………..

It is of direct relevance today. The book was published 5 years after the crash and economic rupture of 1929. It was written 3 years afterthe collapse of the Second Labour Government.

Today we stand in precisely the same spot in the political cycle driven by crisis and political rupture.

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Today we consider Lansbury’s life 5 years after the epochal events of 2008 and 3 years after the collapse of the last Labour Government arguably triggering our greatest crisis since 1931.

…………………………………………..

Labour has a terrible record at such historicturning points.

From our inception we have been plagued by a fundamental tension between orthodoxy and radicalism especially acute at moments of crisis; between transaction and transformation.

You can be detect it throughout our history.

Soon after its formation, Keir Hardie argued that Labour had ‘its conscience dulled by lust of power to that sense of justice which is the salt of national life, it reels towards its doom’

Twenty Five years later in ‘The Choice before the Labour Party’ Tawney describes – after retreat in national government- how the government ‘did not fall with a crash, in a tornado from the blue. But crawled slowly to its doom.’ 

It was consumed by a ‘cautious conventionality’ who ‘retard the recovery of the party by concealing its malady’

It courted the voters ‘with hopes of cheaply won benefits, and if it did not despise them, sometimes addressed them as though it did. It demanded too little and offered too much.’

His words echo down from the past- through Bevan, Kinnock and indeed Blair when railing against party orthodoxy.  

‘The gravest weakness of British Labour is… its lack of creed. The Labour Party is hesitant in action, because divided in mind. It does not achieve what it could, because it does not know what it wants’.

There is, he says, a  ‘void in the mind of the Labour Party’ which leads us into ‘intellectual timidity, conservatism, conventionality, which keeps policy trailing tardily in the rear of realities.’ 

Lansbury shared these criticisms and re-established the creed demanded by Tawneyhinged around ‘The Joy of Living’- a utopian ILP socialism- literally to build the ‘New Jerusalem’- anchored in the streets of Bow- where you find the good Samaritan in ‘every court and alley’- and the desire for human self realisation and to live a good life.

The Labour Party is the vehicle – to provide this ‘wisdom, knowledge and understanding’. It is a patriotic endeavour he equates with Irish Home Rule. He urges the party to be ‘born again’; an explicit attempt to re-establish a political sentiment after the loss and desertion of 1931 reflected in the character of his own leadership.

Death and Isolation

John Shepherd argues that a total renewal of his religious faith occurred in hospital. He believed he had been spared by God to carry on with his work.  It was reflected in a strengthened pacifism as the drumbeat to wargrew louder. There was to be inevitableconfrontation with the likes of Dalton, Bevin and Citrine as Labour re-examined its foreign policy with renewed emphasis on military force in the fight against fascism.

Alongside a reasserted faith there is also a sense of loneliness and melancholia. Thepersonal separation in a hospital bed. Thepolitical isolation from a  Party  shifting toward a more muscular patriotic identity. These are played out alongside personal tragedy. Bessie had died in 1933; his son Edgar died on 28th May 1935.

Labour Today

Labour has too often renounced the transformative in favour of the transactional. 

It has too often retreated from the compromises and messy realities of people into the order and security of the state.

Transactional politics delivers real benefits to people.

But they don’t change anything fundamental in the economic structures and social hierarchies that are the dynamo of inequality.

On their own they don’t generate power and self confidence in people.

For that sense of personal fulfilment, self-knowledge, achievement, dignity, self-esteem, of a life lived well and true to one’s self – you need something more – you need a story that speaks to people’s hopes and dreams and in which they recognise themselves.

A transformative politics is about voicing what people already know and feel but struggle to find the words for.

Transactional politics is about slicing and dicing the electorate in search of victory.

People are reduced to votes and units of calculus.

But to what end and for what purpose? 

We need the statisticians, empiricists, calculators, tacticians, policy technicians to help build a better decent society.

But too often Labour has sent them forth without reason or purpose, other than a tribal urge for victory.

Too many of our manifestos end up as lists of policies, an offer to this group, a promise to that, the different parts never adding up to anything that makes sense to people.

As Tawney said in 1934: ‘it demanded too little and offered too much’.

It is the One Nation frame that can hold both the transformative and transactional.

Neither can win without the other.

So the Policy Review I am involved with isabout producing evidence based policy but embedded in a deeper story of One Nation.

The story determines the policy making and the policy making gives substance and detail to the story and both are given political reality by the movement building of our Party reforms.

……………….

The mass political party of the 20 century that George Lansbury led is gone.

The cultures and social formations of the industrial working class that gave it life and sustained it have gone.

More recently, social democracy  has suffered a cultural devastation – almost if you like, a social death – and while the structures of our party survive the meanings that gave them life have not. 

We are dwindling, and we have to change.

We have to return to our exiled traditions and galvanise for the future.

Indeed the One Nation tradition grows out of the moral outrage at the mechanisation of society. It begins with Carlyle’s the Condition of England question in his essay on Chartism in 1839. His raging against the inhumanity of industrialisation gives first voice to the One Nation tradition: ‘the condition of the great body of people in a country is the condition of the country itself’.

Out of it grows the social novels of Gaskell, Dickens, Disraeli’s Sybil or Two Nations, and Ruskin. It is the tradition of an English modernity of virtue and sensibility and Morris was its greatest exponent.

It was given form within the ILP and Labour through Hardie, MacDonald and Lansbury. It lay deep within Attlee and the texture of his great transformative government. It is captured in the character of Lansbury more than any other and saved the Party at its moment of acute crisis.

 

Politics is always first and foremost poetic because if it lacks the spirit to transform people and give them hope for a better life then it will fail to tackle the fundamental power relations that keep them in their place, however many policies it has lined up.

That’s why to me Lansbury is so important, not just for what he stood for but for his failures and the lessons we can learn from his exemplary life.

 

Conclusions

Attlee said of Lansbury: ‘he was a great Londoner and a great Englishman and a socialist who practiced and preached the brotherhood of man. He was a sincere and devoted Christian who strove to follow in the footsteps of his master’.

Laski said of him ‘he was absolutelystraightforward, absolutely democratic and entirely fearless’

Bob Holman described his own journey toLansbury as reaffirming his belief in Labour for ’putting socialist principles into practice in our everyday behaviour and relationships’.

George Lansbury was the quintessential Labour moralist; the utopian visionary driven by the search for cooperation and fellowship. Not in the abstract but lived every day in these streets that he never left. He embodies the history of both ethical socialism and the ILP in this country.

Lansbury was a genuine radical in terms of women’s emancipation and the widening of the franchise; driven by fundamental concerns about human dignity and equal worth which at different times left him in Brixton and Pentonville and on hunger strike.

Personal advancement in the House of Commons didn’t interest him. Resignation spoke volumes as to personal frustration with the Westminster Party and  Parliament itself. Aged 53 he threw away his seat.

He was sent to Pentonville in 1913 following militant rhetoric some saw as sedition. Demonstrations and mass singing followed in support of his hunger strike. The people got him out of there.

He was the driver behind  the most important public document of the last century- the Minority Report on the Future of the Poor Laws.

As Poor Law Guardian his hatred of the workhouse was personal, deep and profound. The Minority Report was the cornerstone of the future Welfare State delivered by that other great ILP East End activist Clem Attlee. Both refused to accept the notion of the undeserving poor- we should remember that.

The 1946 legislation with the end of the Poor Law stands as testament to Lansbury and Attlee and East London’s humanity captured in the ILP.

……………………

One Nation politics is about reviving the exiled tradition embodied in the life and work of George Lansbury.

It was built in these streets. You can literally see it in the face of the man. Dig out the old photos; his humanity glows, almost as a physical force. And the people knew it.

Memory is itself a political act to recapture what we have lost.

George Lansbury saved the Labour Party because he encapsulated the soul of the Party.

It was, he said ‘to chain down misery and set happiness free’.

Thank you.